The Lib Narrative About the Minneapolis ICE Shooting Took Another Brutal Hit
Reconciliation 2.0 Has Arrived
Check Out President Trump's 'Appropriate and Unambiguous' Response to Heckler
Tim Walz Just Did a Major Flip-Flop on This Minnesota U.S. Attorney
The Latest Update Out of Iran As Regime Attempts to Squash Uprising Will...
U.S. Sees Net Negative Migration for the First Time in Decades
After Democrat Smears, Tom Homan Confirmed ICE Agent and Family Were Forced to...
This Is What's at Stake As SCOTUS Mulls the Issue of Men in...
Cut Them Off NOW!
The Prime of Tough-Guy Progressivism
Living Through Iran’s Slaughter: One Iranian Woman Describes the Horror and Hope Under...
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey Shrugs Off Assaults on ICE Agents: They Are Standing...
ACLU Lawyer Stumped When Justice Alito Asks for the Definition of Man and...
Watch: Woman Dragged Out of Car by ICE After Impeding Enforcement Operations in...
Time to Crack Down on Fraud
OPINION

Race of the Day: Georgia’s 8th District

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Democrat Jim Marshall has been sitting comfortably in his middle Georgia congressional seat since 2003. As he seeks re-election for a 5th term this fall, it appears he’s facing his toughest challenge yet. The incumbent is being called into the ring by Republican state representative Austin Scott, who is ready to make changes in Washington that will grow Georgia’s economy and create jobs.

Advertisement

The 8th Congressional District of the Peach State is spread out over 7,200 square miles, including all of Macon and Bibb counties. Stretching from Newtown, a county in metro Atlanta, to Colquitt, a county just outside the Florida border, it is a Republican-leaning district where John McCain won by a double-digit margin during the 2008 presidential election. Scott received 53%, winning without a runoff, in July’s three-way primary. He enters the general election well-positioned to take advantage of this district’s R+10 Cook Partisan Voting Index score.

Marshall was initially elected to the House in 2002, and was previously mayor of the city of Macon from 1995 to 1999. He was unsuccessful in his bid for the seat in 2000, and barely skimmed by in 2002 with 51%, and again with the same percentage in 2006. The tepid trust voters have in Marshall is just as unsteady as his voting record. Even though he is a member of the Blue Dog Coalition, a group of so-called conservative Democrats in Congress, he stood beside the president on his failed $787 billion economic stimulus plan, and voted to increase the national debt to record levels. In fact, he votes with Democrat leaders like House Speaker and ultra-liberal Californian Nancy Pelosi over 88% of the time.

Advertisement

Though this race has developed late, Scott outraised Marshall during his debut fundraising quarter – a rare feat for a challenger. The Cook Political Report now rates this race as a “toss-up,” in part because the latest polling data shows a close 5-point race.

Scott has been a proven, independent conservative in the state legislature. A small businessman, Scott wants to reduce taxes, rein in spending and crack down on illegal immigration in Congress.

For more information on Austin Scott and his campaign, visit his website, Facebook and Twitter.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement